Page:Birds of North and Middle America partV Ridgway.djvu/93

This page needs to be proofread.
BIRDS OF NORTH AND MIDDLE AMERICA.
65

Panamá (Lion Kill; Panamá) through Colombia (Rio Truando; Bogotá), Venezuela (La Pricion, Rio Caura), British Guiana (Bartica Grove; Camacusa), Ecuadór (Rio Napo; Sarayacu; Vallc de Zamora) and Peru (Pebas; Yurimáguas; Chamicuros; Upper Ucayali; Xeberos; Chyavetas; Tarapata) to Cayenne and western Brazil (Borba and Humaytha, Rio Madeira).

[Muscicapa] pygmæa Gmelin, Syst. Nat., i, pt. ii, 1789, 933 (Cayenne; based on Petit Gobe-mouche tacheté de Cayenne Daubenton, Pl. Enl., pl. 831, fig. 2).
Musciapa pygmæa Latham, Index Orn., i, 1790, 488. — Vieillot, Nouv. Diet, d'Hist. Nat., xxi, 1818, 484 (Cayenne).
F[ormicivora] pygmæa Cabanis, Wiegmann's Archiv für Naturg., xiii, pt. i, 1847, 227.
[Formicivora] pygmæa Bonaparte, Consp. Av., i, 1850, 200.
Formicivora pygmæa Burmeister, Syst. Ueb. Th. Bras., iii, 1856, 77. — Sclater, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 1855, 147 (Bogotá, Colombia); 1858, 67 (e. Ecuadór).
Myrmotherula pygmæa Sclater, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 1858, 234 (monogr.); Cat. Am. Birds, 1862, 179 (Rio Napo, e. Ecuadór); Cat. Birds Brit. Mus. xv, 1890, 230 (Bartica Grove and Camacusa, Brit. Guiana; Pebas, Yurimaguas, and Chamicuros, e. Peru; Rio Napo and Sarayacu, e. Ecuadór; Bogotá, Colombia). — Cassin, Proc. Ac. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1860, 190 (Rio Truando, Colombia).[1]Lawrence, Ann. Lyc. N. Y., vii, 1862, 235 (Lion Hill, Panamá).[1]Sclater and Salvin, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 1866, 185 (Upper Ucayali, e. Peru); 1867, 750 (Xeberos, Yurimaguas, and Chyavetas, e. Peru), 978 (Pebas, e. Peru); 1873, 274 (Upper Ucayali, Xeberos, Yurimaguas, Chyavetas, Chamicuros, and Pebas, e. Peru); 1879, 624 (Yuracares, Bolivia). — Pelzeln, Orn. Bras., ii, Abth., 1869, 80; iv, Abth., 1870, 417.— Salvin, Ibis, 1870, 311 (Rio Truando, Colombia); 1874, 311 (synonymy); 1885, 425 (Brit. Guiana). — Taczanowski, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 1882, 30 (Yurimaguas, e. Peru); Orn. du Pérou, ii, 1884, 37. — Berlepsch, Journ. für Orn., 1889, 304 (Tarapata, n. Peru); Novit. Zool., xv, 1908, 154 (Cayenne). — Salvadori and Festa, Boll. Mus. Zool., etc., Torino, xv, no. 362, 1899, 29 (Valle de Zamora, Ecuadór). — Berlepsch and Hartert, Novit. Zool., ix, 1902, 73 (La Pricion, Rio Cuara, Venezuela). — Hellmayr, Novit. Zool., xiv, 1907, 382 (Borba and Humaytha, Rio Madeira, Brazil; crit.). — Snethlege, Bol. Mus. Goeldi, v, 1908, 55 (Bom Lugar, Rio Purús, n. Brazil).
[Myrmotherula] pygmæa Sclater and Salvin, Nom. Av. Neotr., 1873, 71. — Sharpe, Hand-list, iii, 1901, 20.
M[yrmophila] pygmæum Cabanis and Heine, Mus. Hein., ii, July, 1859, 13, footnote.


Genus MYRMOPAGIS Ridgway.

Myrmopagis[2] Ridgway, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., xxii, Apr. 17, 1909, 69. (Type, Myrmothera axillaris Vieillot.)
(?) Myrmophila[3] Cabanis and Heine, Mus. Hein., ii, July, 1859, 12. (Type, Formicivora brevicauda Swainson.)

  1. 1.0 1.1 These two references, very strangely, are placed under M. surinamensis in the Biologia Centrali- Americana (Aves, ii, 209). I have seen the specimens on which they are based, and they are M. pygmæa, not M. surinamensis.
  2. ?, an ant; ?; a trap.
  3. "Von ? (Ameise) und ? (lieben)." (Cabanis and Heine.)
81255°— Bull. 50—11——5